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Australia apologizes to institutional child sexual abuse victims

Xinhua | Updated: 2018-10-22 13:59
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Australia's Prime Minister Scott Morrison stands before delivering the National Apology to survivors of child sexual abuse in the House of Representatives at Parliament House in Canberra, Australia, on Oct 22, 2018. [Photo/Agencies]

CANBERRA -- Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison has issued a formal apology to victims and survivors of institutional child sexual abuse.

In a televised address in the House of Representatives, the lower house of Australia's Parliament, Morrison promised that the government "will work with survivor groups to ensure their stories are recorded and the history is displayed."

"Today, Australia confronts a trauma, an abomination, hiding in plain sight for far too long," he said on Monday.

"A sorry that dare not ask for forgiveness, a sorry that dare not try and make sense of the incomprehensible, or think it could, a sorry that does not insult with an incredible promise, that sorry that speaks only of profound grief and loss.

"Nothing we can do now will right the wrongs inflicted on our nation's children."

The five-year Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in December made 409 recommendations on how to make institutions safer for children.

Of the 6,875 survivors who gave evidence to the commission, 64.3 percent were male and more than 60 percent were abused by the Catholic Church. More than 93 percent said their abuser was male.

More than half the survivors told the commission that they were between the ages of 10 and 14 when they were abused. They were abused for an average of 2.2 years.

"As a nation, we failed them, we forsook them, and that will always be our shame," Morrison said.

"This apology is for them, and their families, too."

The royal commissioners recommended that religious ministers who have reports of abuse confided in them during confession be forced to report it to authorities, a shake-up of a tradition dating back centuries.

The government has announced a national redress scheme that will pay survivors compensation from the organization by which they were abused.

Morrison on Monday committed to establishing a national child abuse museum and research center to "ensure the nation does not forget the untold horrors they experienced."

Bill Shorten, leader of the opposition Australian Labor Party (ALP), joined Morrison and issued his own apology.

"Australia failed tens of thousands of children across generations and across the country. Our nation let you down. Today we offer you our nation's apology, with humility, honesty, and hope for healing," he said.

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